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    23 commenti

    1. Adorable_Pee_Pee on

      I don’t see the problem, costs less to maintain good for the environment, no brainer

    2. tacitusvanderlinde on

      Seems like a good excuse for councils to save money on the upkeep of parks.

    3. baldy-84 on

      Rewilding is just an excuse for councils to shirk their responsibilities. If you don’t see that, you’re a genuine idiot. I’ve seen cycle lanes rendered useless due to massive overhanging foliage, canal paths turned into a hazard for the same reason, and road corners rendered incredibly dangerous due to non-existent sightlines for the reason because the council used rewilding as an excuse to not spend money.

      Overgrown grass beyond sight hazards is also dangerous due to ticks.

    4. EolAncalimon on

      I wonder if the people moaning about it, are the same people who love nature so much, they also oppose any planning proposals? Would be an interesting data analysis piece

    5. JoeyJoJoeJr_Shabadoo on

      People who feel a need to see only perfectly manicured lawns and consider any sort of long grass or overgrowth as messy are just going to have to find a way to rewire their brains. What they consider to be a nice view is actually an incredibly unnatural one, devoid of nature.

    6. Twitchas on

      Overall it’s one of a few positives that came from austerity, but equally it could look substantially better if it got properly maintained, often it can end up looking like a mess needlessly.

    7. theavocadolady on

      I think they look great and are great for the bees, most other wildlife and the environment in general. Manicured lawns are unnatural and are terrible to maintain. As long as it’s a nice mix between space you can hang out in, and space that’s given over to wildlife then it’s a win for all.

      My local park has started “tidying” and it’s meant they’ve got rid of loads of underbrush and natural habitat for squirrels, hedgehogs and badgers, etc. plus losing wildflowers which were huge bee and butterfly attractors which is terrible from an ecological perspective. I personally think it’s really sad.

    8. Same-Pizza-6724 on

      Unless people actively use it, let nature have it.

      But the deal is that when we need something, or somewhere, we get to use it.

      Say no to bat tunnels, say yes to wild areas.

    9. chaosandturmoil on

      the kids play area near me is now unusable and full of dog shit.

    10. Villan900 on

      I think they look great and love walking through them. You can pretend you’re on an epic adventure. It’s also natural so you know, how things are meant to be. Plus, if the bees go they’re taking us with them so there’s some motivation.

    11. Glum_Position_4216 on

      I’m all for rewilding but does that have to include letting stinging nettles grow across all the pathways?

    12. Surprise! This is what nature actually looks like when we don’t micro manage it.

      I’ll give you a few minutes to adjust to the idea that most of the outdoor space you’ve even seen is a human construction in the same sort of way as the indoor space.

    13. They’re both, because nature isn’t perfect and manicured. Yes they’re an eyesore, that’s the point. They’re meant to be wild and unruly, as nature intended.

    14. dangerousq on

      I’ve said for ages councils should stop cutting alot of grassy areas that essentially aren’t used, just keep the edges that touch pathway’s tidy.

    15. mixxituk on

      I remember in the 80s we finally had to chop all this down due to the hundreds of rats 

    16. Anony_mouse202 on

      “Rewilding” is just an excuse for councils to slash their maintenance budgets.

    17. tucnakpingwin on

      If the rewilding ensures that the land isn’t made up of monocultures, and encourages biodiversity, then it’s a good thing. Sadly many green spaces left to go wild are simply made up of long grass, which doesn’t contribute to wildlife in any positive way.

      It also needs to remain accessible, so maintaining paths, play equipment and other amenities whilst still keeping wildflowers and trees for everyone (human or not) to benefit from.

    18. Funny thing is, it’s only quite recently that we’ve got to a state where most parks actually are being kept nice. Even bits of verge or awkward patches of greenery seem to get maintained. In the past, they mostly were left to get a bit wild, but they didn’t look like in the picture. Usually just a mass of weeds and those things that tangle round your legs.

    19. confuzzledfather on

      And the truth is we have so few places that are really that biodiverse left thanks to all the (quite useful) farm lands that I imagine doing this in parks is providing a significant impact to the environment. 

    20. SettlementBenin on

      “Nature is an eyesore.”

      Headlines from a dying planet.

    21. B1ueRogue on

      Looks like my next door neighbour garden ..the knob never cuts his grass ….it’s for the cats it’s shade ….no mate you’re lazy c

    22. coffeewalnut08 on

      I don’t think it’s an eyesore at all. How can wildflowers, grassland, meadows, various types of plants, insects etc. be an eyesore?

      I also appreciate the extra greenery these rewilded areas provide during this drought.

      It proves they’re much more ecologically resilient and beautiful than a field/lawn.

      Sorry but climate breakdown is already here and it’s time we started acting accordingly.

      If the *natural state* of our land pisses you off, you have first-world problems and need to get over yourself.

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